Iblis Ni Mastaki
by Ashwini Bhatt
Iblis Ni Mastaki
Bhakti Yoga is a profound exploration of the path of devotion, presenting love, surrender, and spiritual discipline through the teachings of Swami Vivekananda.
About This Book
A novel by the celebrated Gujarati author Ashwini Bhatt, known for his fast-paced storytelling and mastery of the suspense and thriller genres.
Key Insights
What if you realized that the devil didn’t live in the fires of hell, but whispered directly into the chaotic, brilliant machinery of the human mind?
In “Iblis Ni Mastaki,” Ashwini Bhatt constructs a world where the boundary between sanity and madness is as thin as a razor’s edge. The story traps the reader in the suffocating heat of an Indian summer evening. The air inside the room is thick with the scent of stagnant dust and the sharp, metallic tang of an aging ceiling fan clicking in a slow, rhythmic stutter. A single, naked bulb overhead casts long, spindly shadows that dance like trapped spirits against the peeling plaster walls.
There is a scene I have not forgotten since I first read it: a confrontation where two characters orbit each other, not with knives, but with syllables. One character leans into the light, eyes gleaming with a terrifying, calculated coldness. “You think you are the author of your own choices,” he says, his voice a low scrape against the silence. The other, trembling, replies, “If I am not, then tell me—who holds the pen?”
Ashwini Bhatt reveals a haunting truth: human nature is a grand, elaborate performance, and we are all terrified that someone might find the script. Bhatt’s craft is exceptional, shifting from frantic, pulse-pounding tension to moments of absolute, chilling stillness. He writes with a prose that feels like a trapdoor opening beneath your feet, famously noting, “In the theater of darkness, the loudest performance is the one we give ourselves.”
[sigh]
The book argues that power is merely the ability to remain calm while everyone else is unraveling. “Iblis Ni Mastaki” is not just a thriller; it is an interrogation of the soul. As the final pages turn, the question remains—if the devil is just a facet of our own ambition, what happens when the mask finally slips?